duke709
Industrial
- Aug 29, 2003
- 2
Please excuse me if this subject has been covered before,I'm new to this forum.
We recently replace a 10 horsepower induction motor. This motor was used on a conveyor system with numerous stops and starts. It was controlled by a Allen Bradley SMC. The motor would operate flawlessly; then intermittently the inrush current would shoot up and the thermal usage recorded on the SMC would increase rapidly. There was definitely NO mechanical binding.The motor would appear to move slightly as if it was single phasing but the controller only reported overload conditions.Then after about a minute, after the motor cooled, it would operate normally again.
It seemed this would only happen on motor start up but not all the time, nor after a set amount of time.
My question is..is this a symptom of a possible open rotor bar ? Also, the condition could not be demostrated with the load (gear reducer) removed.
Thank you for any response
We recently replace a 10 horsepower induction motor. This motor was used on a conveyor system with numerous stops and starts. It was controlled by a Allen Bradley SMC. The motor would operate flawlessly; then intermittently the inrush current would shoot up and the thermal usage recorded on the SMC would increase rapidly. There was definitely NO mechanical binding.The motor would appear to move slightly as if it was single phasing but the controller only reported overload conditions.Then after about a minute, after the motor cooled, it would operate normally again.
It seemed this would only happen on motor start up but not all the time, nor after a set amount of time.
My question is..is this a symptom of a possible open rotor bar ? Also, the condition could not be demostrated with the load (gear reducer) removed.
Thank you for any response